Answer:
Manufactured items from the eastern coast of the United States and Europe made up the bulk of the goods traveling to Mexico. Furs, wool fleeces and woven goods, silver and mules traveled from Mexico for trade in the United States. Millions of dollars in merchandise traveled this 900 mile international trade route.
After a period of industrial spike in Europe, most Europeans now had access to a vast amount of technological advantages. For example, not just factory machinery, but militaristic weapons and artillery. (Cannons and machine guns) As Winston Churchill once wrote, the use of these advancements in an effort to subdue all underdeveloped and what they would consider primitive masses, was a good exercise of rights. Many imperialists believed that they could conquer any area by force because they had the opportunity to, and they did not realize how unethical the actions truly were. This would be considered ethnocentric or ethnocentrism, which is possessing a sense of cultural superiority as you may know from global history. I hope that helps!
Answer: C is correct (the security arrangements that Stalin made to protect himself).
Explanation: the term "Iron Curtain" was used for the first time by Winston Churchill in American town of Fulton (Missouri) in 1946 (so-called "Fulton Speech). At that time Churchill was a ex-prime-minister, but the phenomenon of "Iron Curtain" was quite visible even from the UK.
Answer: The answer is D. Without proof, journalists blamed Spain for the sinking of the ship.
Explanation:
Yellow Journalism is overexaggerated something and the journalists exaggerated the sinking of the ship which later lead to the war.
Answer:
Punic Wars, also called Carthaginian Wars, (264–146 bce), a series of three wars between the Roman Republic and the Carthaginian (Punic) empire, resulting in the destruction of Carthage, the enslavement of its population, and Roman hegemony over the western Mediterranean.
Explanation:
Punic Wars, also called Carthaginian Wars, (264–146 bce), a series of three wars between the Roman Republic and the Carthaginian (Punic) empire, resulting in the destruction of Carthage, the enslavement of its population, and Roman hegemony over the western Mediterranean.